SES wrote:
 
I believe that Edgar A. Poe, one of the young VN's favorite writers, had a deep, varied, and lasting influence on him -- even though he later claimed to have outgrown Poe.  (Interestingly, Poe too fits oddly into the canon of American literature.)

 
In pursuit of this thread I looked up EAP, and was rather surprised to learn that he'd been educated in Scotland and England between the ages of 15 and 20. I do think of him as an American writer, but of a rather peculiar kind. He was popular in England, among the neurotic middle classes, and even more so in France, I believe, among the upper intelligentsia. I wouldn't like to fix a postal address on the House of Usher. It seems to hover in a sort Neo-Gothic country of its own. Not exactly American Gothic, though.

The context for VN's remarks on "best readers" suggest that he was thinking in terms of a popular audience rather than critics and reviewers.  (He may have once considered Edmund Wilson one of his "best readers," but then thought better of it.)

Perfectly true. I was fencing a bit sneakily. Greene was nevertheless an extremely important, almost a key "reader" for VN. Comparative national sales figures would no doubt answer this question.
 
Nevertheless, I am quite willing to agree with Charles that to some extent VN remained only "technically" American -- although I think that this was a deliberate choice on his part, especially after LOLITA.  In my most recent essay on the subject,* I argue that VN's complicated relationship to his adopted country -- especially as an expatriate -- consciously mirrored his relationship to his Russian homeland.  As he himself explained in an interview: "I think I am trying to develop, in this rosy exile, the same fertile nostalgia in regard to America, my new country, as I evolved for Russia, my old one" (SO 49).
 
I was led on to wonder if Conrad could truly be described as an "English" writer. I believe Karen Blixen never even set foot in England, nor would one call her precisely a "colonial" writer. She features, incongruously, in the new DNB, a publication with which I am seriously at odds. Can Beckett really be called a "French" writer? Eliot eventually became quite English, unlike (ugh) Pound. This sort of categorization is perhaps unworthy of any discussion of "art", which I suppose should be above and beyond any such petty constrictions. I still find it misleading, however, to describe VN as an American writer, as it seems to me that all his works, without exception, are the products of a very distinctive European sensibility, and European culture. Not that I've read everything he wrote.
 
Charles  

 

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